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I had a Cannon EasyShare CX7000 many years ago, had the same problem exactly, Canon cameras are not that durable when it comes to dropping it, but I have a Cannon Powershot SD1000 and I have dropped it numerous times and it still functions like it's new. three words REPLACE YOUR CAMERA. oh, and there is no reset button, you are out of luck

The most common fault on a piece of kit that has been dropped is that the solder lead will snap on the heaviest component. Usually the battery or a capacitor, resoldering will fix the problem. However disassembly is the difficult bit

1- Check the battery door indicator switch under the battery door and beside the memory card slot. Is the little black switch damaged or missing? Try pressing down gently using a pen it with the door open and then press the power button. Does it turn on?

2- The fuse has blown and needs to be replaced. Offhand I don't recall where it is on the SD750 PCB or how hard it is to solder on a new one (depends on if its tricky to get at or not). Good thing is fuses are really cheap.

3- Other power problem with the PCB due to corrosion or impact damage. The PCB or 'motherboard' of the camera will need to be replaced.

Canon does not provide parts diagrams, even to camera repair businesses such as myself so I can't help you out with that.

I can tell you that the screws probably shorted out your fuse and that's why the camera will not turn on.

With the screws out of the sides and bottom, the two case pieces will separate at the top if you just pry them apart. As for where the screws go... hard to say, but you can probably see where they are from once you get it open.